Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Black History Time Capsule: Abram Hannibal*

January 3
Abram Hannibal: On this date we celebrate the birth of Abram Hannibal in 1697.
He was an African slave who became a major general and military engineer in Russia.
Hannibal was born in the Eritrean highland, north of the Mareb River in a town called Logon.” the son of the reigning African prince. At the age of eight he was captured and taken to Turkey, where he was once again kidnapped and taken to Moscow. He was given to the Czar, Peter the Great, who grew fond of him because of his intelligence. For ten years Hannibal went everywhere with Peter, who gave him the name Abram (after the famous African general) Petrovich (after himself) Hannibal. He completed his early schooling and was found to have a natural gift for mathematics and engineering. With his skill, he helped to assemble the naval port and fortress town of Kronstadt, which played an important role in the history of Russia. The Czar sent Abram to Paris to study engineering, and he stayed in France for six years. During that time, he joined the French Army as a "commander," taking part in the Spanish war of the Czar’s Guard as an engineer lieutenant. Peter died in 1725 and immediately Hannibal was banished to Siberia. There he built the fortress of Selenchinsk, escaping only to be recaptured and returned to exile. In 1741, a new ruler came to power and Hannibal was restored to honor in the army, quickly rising to the rank of general. With his skill and intelligence, Hannibal made many contributions to Russia: He secured the boundary line between Russia and Sweden, and was appointed to a post to inspect the forts of Russia. But his greatest achievements were his selection as commandant of the city of Reval, and his promotion to a major in the Tomesk stronghold. After retiring from service in 1733, with the accession of Peter the Great’s daughter Empress Elizabeth, he returned to the Court in 1741. She awarded him military promotions, engineering projects and an estate near St. Petersburg where he retired in 1762. Hannibal illegally married Christina Regina Von Shoberg, the daughter of a German officer. The couple had 11 children and in 1799, their granddaughter Nadezhda gave birth to Alexander Pushkin, the father of modern Russian literature and that country’s greatest poet. Hannibal died in 1762, and though he never knew his grandfather, Pushkin was enamored with his African heritage. Pushkin wrote a fictionalized biography of Hannibal The Negro of Peter the Great, in 1837. Reference:The Encyclopedia Britannica, Fifteenth Edition. Copyright 1996 Encyclopedia Britannica Inc. ISBN 0-85229-633-0

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